212
212
Nov 11, 2013
11/13
by
KPIX
tv
eye 212
favorite 0
quote 0
and at the pentagon there is a comparable capability to do that. and one of the things frankly when i was secretary i said, we ought to pay more attention at the defense department to how cia handled this operation because they really have a very effective process. so, i think that's happening. i think the pentagon is beginning to develop that kind of capability. i think ultimately the more we can probably put in to the military the better because it's a much more open process. but there are always going to be the need for the kind of clandestine operation that the cia and cia alone can operate. i think we are best off if we can maintain both of those capabilities. >> schieffer: leadership it seems to me is about priorities. president obama has three years to go here, what do you think his priorities should be over the next three years? >> i want president obama to be successful. to have a legacy. and office. there are important areas where i think he has made an important contribution, but more is going 4v-pi think he's got a good legy on the econ
and at the pentagon there is a comparable capability to do that. and one of the things frankly when i was secretary i said, we ought to pay more attention at the defense department to how cia handled this operation because they really have a very effective process. so, i think that's happening. i think the pentagon is beginning to develop that kind of capability. i think ultimately the more we can probably put in to the military the better because it's a much more open process. but there are...
99
99
Nov 15, 2014
11/14
by
KPIX
tv
eye 99
favorite 0
quote 0
but this review commissioned by the pentagon made that claim sound farcical. consider this exchange with defense secretary hagel about a ludicrous shortage of a specialized wrench used to attach nuclear warheads to missiles spread across bases in north dakota, montana and wyoming. one wrench, 450 missiles at three bases. is that true? and if so, how did the air crews manage with just one wrench? >> it is true. it's reflective and indicative of a system that's been allowed l. kind of slowly back downhill. now, how did they do it? they did it by federal- expressing the one wrench around to each base. >> reporter: the report documents procedures that are so cumbersome and inefficient that overall risk to the mission increases. units are undermanned, overworked and under-trained. a submarine base in the state of washington underwent five straight weeks of inspections. "we spend more time proving we are doing our job right than actually doing our job," one crew member is quoted as saying. deputy defense secretary robert work says the report "punches us between the
but this review commissioned by the pentagon made that claim sound farcical. consider this exchange with defense secretary hagel about a ludicrous shortage of a specialized wrench used to attach nuclear warheads to missiles spread across bases in north dakota, montana and wyoming. one wrench, 450 missiles at three bases. is that true? and if so, how did the air crews manage with just one wrench? >> it is true. it's reflective and indicative of a system that's been allowed l. kind of...
83
83
Sep 9, 2019
09/19
by
KPIX
tv
eye 83
favorite 0
quote 0
he was the liaison between the pentagon and vice president dick cheney who was commanding things that day. what did you learn from him? >> so commander barnes was sort of the director of the white house bunker on 9/11, the bunker under the north lawn that is operational 24 hours a day, has never been used before or since except for the morning of 9/11 when vice president cheney was his intoold that. because remember, they thought flight 93 was coming to hit the white house or the capitol. and so i talked to people and tell the stories in the book of the people who thought they were going to die at the white house that morning. commander barnes was the navy officer who was the one who actually asked vice president cheney for the authority to shoot down the hijacked airliners. he's never spoken before, and i spoke to him, and he said that he asked the vice president three times, because he knew just how momentous that order actually was, and he wanted to make sure that there was no confusion, and he recalls sort of just how annoyed vice president cheney was by that third time, because c
he was the liaison between the pentagon and vice president dick cheney who was commanding things that day. what did you learn from him? >> so commander barnes was sort of the director of the white house bunker on 9/11, the bunker under the north lawn that is operational 24 hours a day, has never been used before or since except for the morning of 9/11 when vice president cheney was his intoold that. because remember, they thought flight 93 was coming to hit the white house or the capitol....
182
182
Jun 10, 2019
06/19
by
KPIX
tv
eye 182
favorite 0
quote 0
the pentagon has begun stockpiling rare earths, and industry is researching new technologies that would replace them. do you get any help from the u.s. government? they want to have a rare earth industry here. >> karayannopoulos: encouragement, yeah. >> stahl: encouragement, that's it? >> karayannopoulos: yeah. >> stahl: govern is not offering incentives like tax what needs to change to bring more of the industry back to the united states? >> karayannopoulos: first of all, we need to take a long-term view. it took 20 years to lose the dominant position, at least 20 years. and it's probably going to take us ten, 15 years, if we execute, for some of these supply chains to start coming back. >> stahl: less than a year after our initial report, molycorps, the owner of the u.s. mountain pass mine, went bankrupt and shut the plant down. new owners m.p. materials are redesigning the facility and hope to get the u.s. back in the rare earth business to challenge china's near global monopoly sometime next year. ( ticking ) >> cbs money watch, sponsored by capital one. what's in your wallet? >> go
the pentagon has begun stockpiling rare earths, and industry is researching new technologies that would replace them. do you get any help from the u.s. government? they want to have a rare earth industry here. >> karayannopoulos: encouragement, yeah. >> stahl: encouragement, that's it? >> karayannopoulos: yeah. >> stahl: govern is not offering incentives like tax what needs to change to bring more of the industry back to the united states? >> karayannopoulos: first...
73
73
Jun 27, 2014
06/14
by
KPIX
tv
eye 73
favorite 0
quote 0
from the pentagon tonight, david martin is telling us that 180 u.s. special forces troops are now in baghdad. last week, president obama authorized sending up to 300 troops to advise the iraqi government as it battles the militant group known as isis, which has taken town after town in recent weeks. the group is trying to establish an islamic state in iraq and syria. isis is also fighting in syria, and today, the president asked congress for half a billion dollars to train and arm moderate syrian rebels that are fighting both isis and the assad syrian dictatorship. it has been a month since a young man went on a deadly rampage at the university of california santa barbara. he killed six people and injured 13 others before killing himself. the parents of two of the victims spoke to ben tracy. >> we really hope we are the last family to have to endure this kind of unspeakable pain. >> reporter: and that's why you're speaking out. >> that's the only reason we speak out. >> reporter: these four parents say they would give their own lives to have their son
from the pentagon tonight, david martin is telling us that 180 u.s. special forces troops are now in baghdad. last week, president obama authorized sending up to 300 troops to advise the iraqi government as it battles the militant group known as isis, which has taken town after town in recent weeks. the group is trying to establish an islamic state in iraq and syria. isis is also fighting in syria, and today, the president asked congress for half a billion dollars to train and arm moderate...
169
169
Feb 10, 2013
02/13
by
KPIX
tv
eye 169
favorite 0
quote 0
publishing the pentagon papers revealed a government making public statements about the vietnam war that it knew to be false. the watergate revelations revealed a cancer of government corruption. making public personal phone numbers and family conversations about the health of an ill father are no one's business but the family. for the most part the mainstream media handled the bush e-mail hacking with restraint. we report the the hacking. that is news but little else. still, the episode is a less-than-gentle reminder of how technology is redefining our culture, the whole idea of privacy, and, yes the respect or lack of respect that honest citizens should have for each other. these rat things that all of us not just journalists may want to think about. how the news is delivered will take care of itself. ould aluminum production in south africa, and the aerospace industry in the u.s.? at t. rowe price, we understand the connections of a complex global economy. it's just one reason over 75% of our mutual funds beat their 10-year lipper average. t. rowe price. invest with confidence. reques
publishing the pentagon papers revealed a government making public statements about the vietnam war that it knew to be false. the watergate revelations revealed a cancer of government corruption. making public personal phone numbers and family conversations about the health of an ill father are no one's business but the family. for the most part the mainstream media handled the bush e-mail hacking with restraint. we report the the hacking. that is news but little else. still, the episode is a...
439
439
Jan 7, 2019
01/19
by
KPIX
tv
eye 439
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> cooper: --for misstating some statistics about pentagon spending? >> ocasio-cortez: if people want to really blow up one figure here or one word there, i would argue that they're missing the forest for the trees. i think that there's a lot of people more concerned about being precisely, factually, and semantically correct, than about being morally right. >> cooper: but being factually correct is important-- >> ocasio-cortez: it's absolutely important. and whenever i make a mistake,s" and then i restate what my point was. but it's-- it's not the same thing as the president lying about immigrants. it's not the same thing, at all. >> trump: we started the wall anyway, and we're going to get that done. we're going to get that done. ( cheers and applause ) >> cooper: you don't talk about president trump very much. >> ocasio-cortez: no. >> cooper: why? >> ocasio-cortez: no. because i think he's a symptom of a problem. >> cooper: what do you mean? >> ocasio-cortez: the president certainly didn't invent racism. but he's certainly given a voice to it, and ex
. >> cooper: --for misstating some statistics about pentagon spending? >> ocasio-cortez: if people want to really blow up one figure here or one word there, i would argue that they're missing the forest for the trees. i think that there's a lot of people more concerned about being precisely, factually, and semantically correct, than about being morally right. >> cooper: but being factually correct is important-- >> ocasio-cortez: it's absolutely important. and whenever i...
151
151
Mar 1, 2016
03/16
by
KPIX
tv
eye 151
favorite 0
quote 0
at the pentagon for the joint staff support center. he joined the army in 2002 and served in iraq for two tours. prosecutors say hamilton had a previous run-in with the law but would not release details. prince william county prosecutor paul ebert. >> sad, sad, sad. a's an example of an officer's worst nightmare. >> reporter: officer guindon grew up in merrimack, new hampshire. in her 2005 high school yearbook she wrote, "live for something rather than die for nothing." guindon is the 14th police officer killed in the line of duty so far this year. scott, 11 of the 14 were killed by gunfire. that's a number that's risen dramatically compared to the same time last year. >> pelley: jeff pegues. thank you, jeff. turning overseas now, isis has been losing ground on the battlefield, but it's apparently striking back with a series of bombings in and around baghdad haese past two days. more than 100 were killed. most at this marketplace in a shiite neighborhood. isis is sunni, the other main faction of islam. the u.n. said today the ceasefire
at the pentagon for the joint staff support center. he joined the army in 2002 and served in iraq for two tours. prosecutors say hamilton had a previous run-in with the law but would not release details. prince william county prosecutor paul ebert. >> sad, sad, sad. a's an example of an officer's worst nightmare. >> reporter: officer guindon grew up in merrimack, new hampshire. in her 2005 high school yearbook she wrote, "live for something rather than die for nothing."...
234
234
Jan 23, 2014
01/14
by
KPIX
tv
eye 234
favorite 0
quote 0
military aircraft that will be on alert at bases in the region as the pentagon put it, scott, for all manner of contingencies. >> pelley: charlie, thanks very much. today the insurance industry said that ten out of 11 subcompact cars failed a new crash test which measures frontal impact. only the chevrolet spark earned an acceptable rating. six were rated poor-- the honda fit and the fiat 500 performed worst. or power up your lunch with antibiotic-free chicken and our flavorful cilantro jalapeno hummus. power bowls from panera bread - power up today. of the dusty basement at 1406 35th street the old dining table at 25th and hoffman. ...and the little room above the strip mall off roble avenue. ♪ this magic moment it is the story of where every great idea begins. and of those who believed they had the power to do more. dell is honored to be part of some of the world's great stories. that began much the same way ours did. in a little dorm room -- 2713. ♪ this magic moment ♪ to severe plaque psoriasis... the frustration... covering up. so i talked with my doctor. he prescribed enbr
military aircraft that will be on alert at bases in the region as the pentagon put it, scott, for all manner of contingencies. >> pelley: charlie, thanks very much. today the insurance industry said that ten out of 11 subcompact cars failed a new crash test which measures frontal impact. only the chevrolet spark earned an acceptable rating. six were rated poor-- the honda fit and the fiat 500 performed worst. or power up your lunch with antibiotic-free chicken and our flavorful cilantro...
0
0.0
Oct 16, 2023
10/23
by
KPIX
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> reporter: according to the pentagon, huerta is a former u.s. army counterintelligence agent. dozens of texts for government accountability revealed huerta was in texas looking for migrants to fill the planes. her progress was reported back to key members of the florida governor's office. in august 2022, huerta texted florida public safety czar, larry keith. as she searched for migrants in texas. just got back, churches were empty. on september 5th, keith sends this progress note to then chief of staff for governor desantis. i'm back out here, conditions are quite favorable. very good, you have my full support. call any time. six days later, keef, the public safety czar, informs the governor's chief of staff that the two planes could be filled to capacity. we are at 50. a delighted -- put it this way, yahtzee, we're full. for days the migrants were housed and fed at this $50 a night hotel near the san antonio airfield. the afternoon before they left, daniel says perla gave them a $10 mcdonald's gift card. he still carries his. >> translator: she said, here's a card, but i need
. >> reporter: according to the pentagon, huerta is a former u.s. army counterintelligence agent. dozens of texts for government accountability revealed huerta was in texas looking for migrants to fill the planes. her progress was reported back to key members of the florida governor's office. in august 2022, huerta texted florida public safety czar, larry keith. as she searched for migrants in texas. just got back, churches were empty. on september 5th, keith sends this progress note to...
0
0.0
Mar 27, 2023
03/23
by
KPIX
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
2008, he joined the defense department's project to revolutionize prosthetics, but he didn't think the pentagon knew what it was up against. >> there are 100 billion neurons in the brain interconnected with 100 trillion synapses. i mean, the human brain, it's like the most complex system in the known universe. >> too complex, he believed, to target electrical stimulation to exactly the right neurons. >> and when we electrically stimulate, we activate hundreds, thousands of them at the same time, in ways that would never happen naturally. it just seemed like that very impoverished interface with this nervous system would never do any -- be able to do anything useful. and it turns out i was wrong. >> he was proved wrong by his own research... >> how ya doin', scott? nice to meet you. >> nice to meet you, scott. >> ...with volunteers including scott imbrie. >> and you can feel that? >> i feel it on my fingertips. >> ...whose movement and sense of touch are limited by a spinal injury from a car accident. computer ports in imbrie's skull are wired to the motor and sensory parts of his brain. electro
2008, he joined the defense department's project to revolutionize prosthetics, but he didn't think the pentagon knew what it was up against. >> there are 100 billion neurons in the brain interconnected with 100 trillion synapses. i mean, the human brain, it's like the most complex system in the known universe. >> too complex, he believed, to target electrical stimulation to exactly the right neurons. >> and when we electrically stimulate, we activate hundreds, thousands of...
73
73
Oct 22, 2014
10/14
by
KPIX
tv
eye 73
favorite 0
quote 0
leadership, the paper published a classified government study of the war in indochina in 1971 known as the "pentagon papers," a risk ratified by a supreme court decision. but it was the "post's" coverage of the watergate stanley scanl which led to president nixon's resignation that made bradley a public figure. he was portrayed by jason robards in the movie "all the president's men." >> i can't do the reporting for my reporter chrkz means i have to trust them. i hate trusting anybody. >> reporter: bradley kept two rookie reporters, carl bernstein and bob woodward, on the watergate story, rather than replace them with more experienced staffers. reporter bob woodward: >> he had the touch. he had the ability to encourage people, stimulate people, but not run over them. >> reporter: bradley was one of the few who knew woodward's and bernstein's main source, known for years only as "deep throat" was actually f.b.i. director mark felp. >> there was always the risk of having a story that was high-risk. it was never hostile. it was, hey, look, we're on the same team. i'm trying to check and make sure you've
leadership, the paper published a classified government study of the war in indochina in 1971 known as the "pentagon papers," a risk ratified by a supreme court decision. but it was the "post's" coverage of the watergate stanley scanl which led to president nixon's resignation that made bradley a public figure. he was portrayed by jason robards in the movie "all the president's men." >> i can't do the reporting for my reporter chrkz means i have to trust...
41
41
Jul 11, 2021
07/21
by
KPIX
tv
eye 41
favorite 0
quote 0
want to rely on your experience as secretary of homeland security, but also as general counsel to the pentagon. how do you define, in this murky new world, what an act of war is, what conflict looks like? how should we think about this? >> good question. you have to look at it in four categories. one is basic surveillance, traditional spying. and though we cannot minimize it, there is an aspect of all is fair among thieves when you're dealing with surveillance, reconnaissance, and spying. there is theft, theft of intellectual property, and very often by the government -- the chinese government, for example, engages in theft of our intellectual property here in this country. and then there is an offensive cyber attack for purposes of degrading or destroying capability. most notably in critical infrastructure. and from a national security perspective, that is what we most worry about. and then there is ransomware, the encryption or theft of a profit business' data for purposes of collecting a fee for returning it. it is prevalent. it is growing. they are devilishly creative in implanting it in s
want to rely on your experience as secretary of homeland security, but also as general counsel to the pentagon. how do you define, in this murky new world, what an act of war is, what conflict looks like? how should we think about this? >> good question. you have to look at it in four categories. one is basic surveillance, traditional spying. and though we cannot minimize it, there is an aspect of all is fair among thieves when you're dealing with surveillance, reconnaissance, and spying....
228
228
Apr 21, 2013
04/13
by
KPIX
tv
eye 228
favorite 0
quote 0
they're talk pentagon war. ing about war. they are at war against us. we have to recognize that. i think it would be very helpful to reclassify the major hasan case as a terrorist attack. it's strange and i think harmful in the effort of breaking through this political correctness so we can analyze this effectively, not to describe major hasan's attack, yelling, a la aqaba," after consulting with allawi, talking about jihad. the people killed there were killed as parent of this war, and that should be described as a terrorist attack. and studied from that point of view. maybe that would have helped a little bit in getting us further ahead if we had classified that correctly. >> schieffer: all right. well, thank you speech to both of you for bringing this perspective. and we'll be right back with a happy story. ♪ touching you sweet caroline ♪ ,,,,,,,,,,,, go a long way to find good news over this past week. but we did. we went all the way to china. earlier today, at the great hall of the people in beijing, american investor steve schwarzman, founder of the blackstone group, an
they're talk pentagon war. ing about war. they are at war against us. we have to recognize that. i think it would be very helpful to reclassify the major hasan case as a terrorist attack. it's strange and i think harmful in the effort of breaking through this political correctness so we can analyze this effectively, not to describe major hasan's attack, yelling, a la aqaba," after consulting with allawi, talking about jihad. the people killed there were killed as parent of this war, and...
209
209
May 11, 2014
05/14
by
KPIX
tv
eye 209
favorite 0
quote 0
and i've watched secretary gates covering the pentagon, fire people. if you did the wrong thing in bob gates' eyes, you were out. and he imposed a degree of accountability on that big, impossible-to-manage place that's rarely seen. and i think that's really the message i'd take away from that interview if you're looking at -- we talked about the secret service problems. they need accountability. they need somebody to just go in and look at what happened and fire the people who did things wrong, same thing with v.a., same thing with the kind of policies in our financial sector that elizabeth warren talked about. that seems like the missing thing right now in our public life is holding people accountable, not in a partisan nasty way but in the sense of good public management. >> schieffer: well, you know, to your point, i remember very well when the airports turned up they were being kind of careless with handling nuclear weapons, he fired not only the airport chief of staff -- >> and the sealktary. schieffer: he also fired the secretary. >> i remember b
and i've watched secretary gates covering the pentagon, fire people. if you did the wrong thing in bob gates' eyes, you were out. and he imposed a degree of accountability on that big, impossible-to-manage place that's rarely seen. and i think that's really the message i'd take away from that interview if you're looking at -- we talked about the secret service problems. they need accountability. they need somebody to just go in and look at what happened and fire the people who did things wrong,...
70
70
May 21, 2012
05/12
by
KPIX
tv
eye 70
favorite 0
quote 0
the pentagon has still not discovered why some f-22 pilots become disoriented and exhibit other symptoms of oxygen deprivation. in the mail this week, some viewers have taken us to task for our april 29th interview with former c.i.a. counterterrorism head jose rodriguez, calling us either too hard or too soft on him as he defended the c.i.a.'s post-9/11 interrogation techniques. one wrote, "perhaps ms. stahl's homework should be writing a story on what would have happened if the c.i.a. had done nothing following 9/11." and there was this: "has cbs considered the consequences of broadcasting to a vast live audience a pitch for torture? i'm lesley stahl. we'll be back next week with another edition of "60 minutes." time for evan and jerry. and, boy... oh, my... [ male announcer ] ...are they enjoying it. i might get another one. with some more sauce. [ male announcer ] but their quick bite to eat... could potentially turn into a long night of the shakes. thankfully, evan's corolla has available entune with bing to help them find another restaurant. another reason you can always count on co
the pentagon has still not discovered why some f-22 pilots become disoriented and exhibit other symptoms of oxygen deprivation. in the mail this week, some viewers have taken us to task for our april 29th interview with former c.i.a. counterterrorism head jose rodriguez, calling us either too hard or too soft on him as he defended the c.i.a.'s post-9/11 interrogation techniques. one wrote, "perhaps ms. stahl's homework should be writing a story on what would have happened if the c.i.a. had...